KEY POINTS
  • Leaders of the Group of 20 leading industrialized and developing countries will gather this weekend in New Delhi for a summit that will mark the end of India's year-long G20 presidency.
  • The prospect for a joint communique appears dim. Russia and China have blocked these binding agreements at all major G20 meetings so far, objecting to language referring to the Ukraine crisis.
  • The lack of consensus may undercut India's efforts in using the G20 presidency to burnish its global credentials and ambitions.
U.S. President Joe Biden and India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi at an arrival ceremony during a state visit on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington on June 22, 2023.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has turned the normally sedate rotating presidency of the Group of 20 nations into a branding vehicle to burnish India's geopolitical importance — underscoring India's emergence as a key voice on the world stage.

The country's diplomats now face a race against time to broker tangible multilateral outcomes at this weekend's G20 leaders' summit in New Delhi that will mark the end of India's year-long presidency of the bloc of leading industrialized and developing economies.